Chris Hedges: Trump has no Soul
Mar 30,
2026
Trump Has
No Soul
Trump is
dangerous not simply because of his imbecility and unbridled narcissism, but
because he lacks the core attributes of empathy and understanding that define
the human soul.
By Chris Hedges / substack.com
The most
profound realities of human existence are often the ones that can never be
measured or quantified. Wisdom. Beauty. Truth. Compassion. Courage. Love.
Loneliness. Grief. The struggle to face our own mortality. A life of meaning.
But
perhaps the greatest conundrum is the concept of a soul. Do we have a soul? Do
societies have souls? And, most basically, what is a soul?
Philosophers
and theologians, including Plato, Aristotle, Augustine and Arthur Schopenhauer,
have all grappled with the concept of a soul, with Schopenhauer preferring to
define the mystical force within us as will. Sigmund Freud used the Greek
word psyche. But most have accepted, whatever the definition, some version of a
soul’s existence.
While the
concept of the soul is opaque, soullessness is not. Soullessness means
something inside of us is dead. Basic human feelings and connections are shut
down. Those without souls lack empathy. I saw the soulless in war. Those so
calcified inside they kill without any demonstrable feeling or remorse.
The
soulless exist in a state of insatiable self-worship. The idol they have
erected to themselves must be constantly fed. It demands a never-ending stream
of victims. It demands abject obedience and subservience, publicly on display
at Trump cabinet meetings.
Psychologists,
I expect, would define the soulless as psychopathic.
I write
this not to get into an esoteric debate about the soul, but to warn what
happens when those without souls seize power. I want to write about what is
lost and the consequences of that loss. I want to caution you that death, our
death — as individuals and as a collective — mean nothing to those without
souls.
This
makes the soulless very, very dangerous.
Those who
lack souls have no concept of their own limitations. They feed off a bottomless
and self-delusional optimism, giving to their cruelest deeds and bitterest
defeats, the patina of goodness, success and morality.
Those
without souls — as Paul Woodruff writes in his small masterpiece “Reverence: Renewing a Forgotten
Virtue” — do
not have the capacity for reverence, awe, respect and shame. They believe they
are gods.
The
soulless cannot respond rationally to reality. They live in self-constructed
echo chambers. They hear only their own voice. Civic, familial, legal and
religious rituals and ceremonies that transport those with souls into the realm
of the sacred, into a space where we acknowledge our shared humanity, forcing
us, at least for a moment, to humble ourselves, are meaningless to those
without souls. Those without souls cannot see because they cannot feel.
The
soulless, enslaved by narcissism, greed, a lust for power and hedonism, cannot
make moral choices. Moral choices for them do not exist. Truth and falsehoods
are identical. Life is transactional. Is it good for me? Does it make me feel
omnipotent? Does it give me pleasure? This stunted existence banishes them from
the moral universe.
Human
beings, including children, are commodities to the soulless, objects to exploit
for pleasure or profit or both. We saw this soullessness displayed in the
Epstein Files. And it was not only Epstein. Huge sections of our ruling class
including billionaires, Wall Street financiers, university presidents,
philanthropists, celebrities, Republicans, Democrats and media personalities,
consider us worthless.
Thucydides
understood. Reverence is not a religious virtue but a moral virtue. Woodruff
went so far as to define it as a political virtue. Reverence for shared ideals,
Woodruff writes, is the only thing that can bind us together. It is the only
attribute that ensures mutual trust. Reverence allows us to remember what it
means to be human. It reminds us that there are forces we cannot control,
forces that we will never understand, forces of life that we did not create and
must honor and protect — including the natural world — and forces that allow us
moments of transcendence, or what in religious terms, we call grace.
“If you
desire peace in the world, do not pray that everyone share your beliefs,”
Woodruff writes. “Pray instead that all may be reverent.”
Trump’s
celebration of himself is made manifest in his stunted vocabulary of
superlatives and his rebranding of national monuments. He tears
down the East Wing to construct his gaudy and oversized $400 million ballroom.
He proposes a 250-foot-tall memorial arch, adorned with gilded statues and
eagles, in honor of himself, an arch that will be bigger than the Arch of
Triumph erected by North Korean dictator Kim II Sung in Pyongyang. He is
planning a “National Garden of American Heroes” that will include life-size
statues of celebrities, sports figures, political and artistic figures deemed
by Trump to be politically correct, along with, of course, himself. His face
adorns the sides of federal buildings on huge, well-lit banners. He changed the
name of the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts to the
Donald J. Trump and the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing
Arts. He added his name to the headquarters of the U.S. Institute of Peace. He
has announced a new fleet of U.S. naval vessels called Trump-class battleships.
These are
monuments not only to Trump, but to a perverted ethic, to the insatiable
self-worship that defines the inner void of the soulless. Monuments, houses of
worship and national shrines dedicated to justice, self-sacrifice and equality,
which demand from us humility and introspection, which require the capacity for
reverence, mystify the soulless.
The
soulless have no sense of aesthetics. They have no sense of balance, symmetry
and proportion. The bigger, the gaudier, the more encrusted in gold leaf, the
better. They seek to shut out everything and everyone else, to herd us with
offerings to the feet of Moloch.
When the
soulless wage war it is part of this perverted drive to build a monument to
themselves. When war goes badly, as it is going in Iran, the soulless, unable
to read reality, demand greater levels of violence and destruction. The more they fail, the more they are
convinced everyone has betrayed them, the more they descend into a tyrannical
rage.
Trump,
potentially facing a humiliating debacle in Iran, will lash out like a wounded
beast. It does not matter how many suffer and die. It does not matter what
weapons, including nuclear weapons, must be employed. He must triumph, or at
least appear to triumph.
“Fathers
and teachers, I ponder, ‘What is hell?’” Father Zossima asks in Fyodor
Dostoevsky’s “The Brothers Karamazov.” “I maintain that it is the suffering of
being unable to love.”
This is
the plight of the soulless. They seek, in their misery, to make their hell our
own.
Chris Hedges is a Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist who was a
foreign correspondent for fifteen years for The New York Times, where he served
as the Middle East bureau chief and Balkan bureau chief. He has taught at
Columbia University, New York University, Princeton University, and the
University of Toronto.
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